Provided by: duck_0.14.2_all bug

NAME

       duck - the Debian Url ChecKer

SYNOPSIS

        duck  [ OPTION ]... [-f file] [-u file] [-c file] [URL]

DESCRIPTION

       duck extracts links, email address domains and VCS-* entries from the following files:

       o      debian/control

       o      debian/upstream, debian/upstream-metadata.yaml and debian/upstream/metadata

       o      debian/copyright

       o      DEP-3 patch files in every directory a series file is found

       o      systemd.unit  files  (*.socket,  *.device, *.mount, *.automount, *.swap, *.target, *.path, *.time,
              *.snapshot, *.slice, *.scope)

       o      Appstream files (*.appdata)

       If an URL is supplied, duck uses dget to download the specified URL and processes the  downloaded  source
       package (*.dsc file) instead of working on the current directory.

       It  tries to access those VCS-* entries and URLs using the appropriate tool to find out whether the given
       URLs or entries are broken or working. If errors are detected, the filename, fieldname and  URL/email  of
       the broken entry are displayed.

       duck  will  search for the default files (see above) and skip them silently, if they cannot be found.  If
       specific filenames for options -c, -f or -u are given, and one of those files cannot be found, duck exits
       with exit code 2.

       Email address domains are checked for existing MX records, A records, or AAAA records, in this order.  If
       none of these 3 are found for a given domain, it is considered broken.

       Checks results are displayed with 3 different error levels

       O:     (OK) Indicates that the given check did not result in an error. Only shown if -n is used.

       I:     (Information)  Indicates  informational warnings, suchs as missing helper tools as well as failing
              checks based on searches in unstructured text files, which sometimes lead to false positives.

       E:     (Error) Indicates failing checks based on data from well-defined fields (e.g. Homepage:  entry  in
              debian/control).

       and 3 different certainty-levels

       certain
              Data taken from well defined fields. As the format of this field is specified (e.g. Debian Policy,
              etc.), it can be checked by the appropriate tools. If this check then fails, the data in the field
              is certainly erroneous.

       possible
              Data  extracted  using  regular expressions (e.g. email addresses, URLs). This might lead to false
              positives, so the check result is possibly a false positive.

       wild-guess
              Data extracted from websites, by  using  regular  expressions.  This  is  still  experimental  and
              probably buggy, hence the "wild-guess".

OPTIONS

       -n     dry run. Don't run any checks, just show entries to be checked.

       -q     quiet mode. Suppress all output.

       -v     verbose mode. This shows all URLs found and the checks run.

       --modules-dir=DIRECTORY
              specify  modules  directory.  Mostly  useful  for  developing  new  checks.  If  this parameter is
              specified, only modules defined in this directory are used. You have to copy all *.pm  files  from
              /usr/share/duck/lib/checks to the directory specified.

       --color=[WHEN]
              Specify when to emit escape sequences to the output. Available options are:

                      auto  Emit  color  escape codes on STDOUT/STDERR, no color if output is piped to a file or
                      the current terminal is not capable of displaying colors.

                      always Always emit color escape codes.

                      never Never emit color escape codes.

       --no-https     do not try to find matching https URLs to http URLs. See also the DUCK_NOHTTPS environment
                      variable.

       --no-check-certificate
                      do not check if SSL certificates autenticity. This is highly discouraged!

       --missing-helpers
                      display list of missing external helper tools and exits.

       --version      display copyright and version information

       -f             specify path to control file. This overrides the default debian/control.

       -F             skip processing of the control file.

       -u             specify path to upstream metadata file. This overrides the default files  debian/upstream,
                      debian/upstream-metadata.yaml and debian/upstream/metadata.

       -U             skip processing of the upstream metadata file.

       -c             specify path to copyright file. This overrides the default debian/copyright.

       -C             skip processing of copyright file.

       -P             skip processing of patch files.

       -A             skip processing of appstream metadata files.

       -S             skip processing of systemd.unit files.

       -l filename    Process  URLs, email addresses, git:// and svn:// entries from the file specified. Specify
                      one entry per line. This also disables all other check modules searching  for  entries  in
                      various files.

       --disable-urlfix=<fix1,...>
                      disables  the specified url fix(es). An urlfix tries to remove leading/trailing characters
                      from extracted URLs, like trailing dots or parentheses. Using this parameter  enables  all
                      urlfixes minus the specified ones.

       --enable-urlfix=<fix1,...>
                      enables  the  specified  url fix(es). Using this parameter disabled all urlfixes minus the
                      specified ones.

                      The following urlfixes are available:

                      TRAILING_COLON Removes trailing colon ":" character.

                      TRAILING_PAREN_DOT Removes the string ")." from the end of the URL.

                      TRAILING_PUNCTUATION Removes trailing "." and "," characters.

                      TRAILING_QUOTES Removes trailing single quotes "'" characters. Note: Double quotes (") are
                      already correctly handled by the used perl regex matchers.

                      TRAILING_SLASH_DOT Removes the string "/." (without the quotes) from the end of the URL.

                      TRAILING_SLASH_PAREN Removes the string "/)" (without the quotes) from the end of the URL.

       --tasks=[number]
                      Specify the number of checks allowed to run in parallel. Default value is 24.  This  value
                      must be an integer value >0.

       All urlfixes are enabled by default.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       DUCK_NOHTTPS
              If this variable is set, do not try to find matching https URLs to http URLs.

       XDG_CONFIG_HOME
              if  this variable is set, use the config file (if any) $XDG_HOME/duck/duck.conf. The default value
              is $HOME/.config/duck/duck.conf .

       XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
              defines the preference-ordered set of base  directories  to  search  for  configuration  files  in
              addition  to  the  XDG_CONFIG_HOME  base  directory.  The directories in XDG_CONFIG_DIRS should be
              separated with a colon ':'.

EXAMPLE

       To run duck, change your working directory to an extracted Debian source package and run:
        duck

EXIT STATUS

       0      Success, no errors

       1      Error(s) detected

       2      User-specified file not found

FILES

       debian/duck-overrides
              Overrides-file in the Debian package source tree. This files contains a list of URL  regexs  which
              should  not  be  reported  as down/broken. This might be useful in cases, where URLs are extracted
              from old/outdated copyright-files or patches, which will never ever be  working,  and  which  will
              then lead to false positives. Please see an example in /usr/share/doc/duck/examples.

       duck.conf
              Config  file  which  contains the regular expressions used to detect parked domains and redirected
              websites. The default file is in /etc/duck/duck.conf. duck also  honors  the  XDG  Base  Directory
              Specification, see the section ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES for details.  Search order for duck.conf is:

              $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/duck/duck.conf (default: $HOME/.config/duck/duck.conf)

              /etc/duck/duck.conf

              /$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS (default: /etc/xdg/duck/duck.conf)

              Please  see  the XDG Base Directory Specification (https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-
              spec/basedir-spec-latest.html) for more details.

SEE ALSO

       Please see http://duck.debian.net/ for additional information as well as an overview of duck  checks  run
       on all source packages in Debian/unstable.

                                                   2017-08-10                                            DUCK(1)